It seems that you have worn yourself out arguing with the likes of Plunkies and
some other people. My advice is not to speak to them, as they detest all
understanding but their own.
"Reprove not a scorner, lest he hate thee: rebuke a wise man, and he will
love thee." - Proverbs 9:8
"Speak not in the ears of a fool: for he will despise the wisdom of thy
words." - Proverbs 23:9
I've been browsing the thread "A Challenge to the Atheist" and found
your latest post at the last page. I say you have a pretty interesting and wide
grasp of the Bible. Thank you. Reading the first ages of the forum drives me
crazy. I could have said my word on the matter referencing the Word myself but
you've done it better.
Again, thank you.
Hi Kellyo, just wanted to know if you got my messege in your guestbook a week
ago. You can take all the time you need, but could you post in my guestbook when
you have a chance so I know when you've atleast noted that I replied to your
messege. Thanks! ^_^
EDIT: Uh...You seem to have posted some long rant on my guestbook. As far as I
can tell I think it's about this link (I guess?). I didn't actually write the
article you know...I just gave you the link. Hell I didn't even comment on it
one way or the other. In fact I barely skimmed it, I just thought it might be
helpful to one of you. So, if you don't mind please keep your inane ramblings
about your dead pal jesus and his invisible friend to yourself, unless I give
you a legitimate reason to do otherwise. Thanks!
(Oh and personally, I'd go with self-deluded fanatic if I had to pick, which I
guess would fall somewhere between liar and lunatic, but nowhere near lord.)
Quote: Glad to hear you are
familiar with CS Lewis. However, he doesn't leave other possibilities open.
Those three are the only three choices you have.
Then we can safely assume C.S. Lewis made a flawed argument. If you asked me if
I thought 2+2= 5, 6, or 7 I would say none and that it was 4. If you said I had
to pick one of those three because you don't give me any other possibilities I
would be right to say that your question was illogical.
Quote: If Christ was simply
eccentric and believed he was god then he'd fall into category number two. There
are no other choices but Liar, Lunatic, or Lord.
That's wrong. I think a lunatic would be a bit extreme, even calling him
eccentric might be a bit much. If a child was brought up its entire life to
believe he or she was the Messiah then it is likely that child would believe
they were (note that I'm not stating this was Jesus's case. It is
hypothetical.). I don't want to take guesses at Jesus's character, but those
three are not the only possibilities.
Quote: Now, for your question.
Unlike what some may think about me, my faith in Christ and the Bible's
authority has originated from logic and reason, from investigating the evidence,
and from need and necessity for Him. The Bible tells us to "love the Lord
with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind." That covers everything -
from a standpoint of emotion, faith, perseverence, and
reason.
I don't think of you as illogical because I have yet to see exactly why you
believe in the Christian Church's god. Atleast you depend on your own ability to
reason instead of asking others to justify your beliefs for you. ^_^
Quote: Cosmological - reasons from
the existence of the cosmos to a Creator: Argument from...unmoved movers,
existence of good things, necessary existence, first cause, motion, efficient
causality, possibility and necessity, gradation (perfection) of things, first
cause of being, producibility, sufficient reason.j
Ontological - argues from the concept of a Necessary Being to that Being's
existence: This one is very deep and contains so many discussions in the past. There are no specific categories
like the cosmological but instead years of various responses. At the end of all
discussion this argument does prove a necessary
being but by itself does not designate which kind of God (or gods) is
found at the conclusion. Therefore, in order to defend Theism one must go beyond
this argument. But, this argument is good to argue with atheists who believe in
no necessary being.
Teleological - moves from design to a Designer. This one is fun. I believe A.E.
Taylor has presented one of the best arguments to confirm this; however, it is
friggin long. I will post it later.
I'll look these up and post about them later. I'm really tierd.. =P
Quote: Kant
1. The greatest good of all persons is that they have happiness in harmony with
duty.
2. All persons should strive for the greatest good.
3. What persons ought to do, they can do.
4. But persons are not able to realize the greatest good in this life or without
God.
5. Therefore, we must postulate a God and a future life in which the greatest
good can be achieved.
1. No, the "greatest good of all persons" is to gain knowledge, if
anything.
2. All persons should aim for this "greatest good" if it is logically
sound. Having "happiness in harmony" sounds like a waste of time.
3. Yes.
4. Wait, how did God get involved? People can "live in happiness" and
"harmony" without a god.
5. Incorrect.
Quote: CS Lewis
1.There must be a universal moral law, or else: (a)Moral disagreements would
make no sense, as we all assume they do. (b)All moral criticisms would be
meaningless (e.g., "The Nazis were wrong."). (c)It is unnecessary to
keep promises or treaties, as we all assume that it is. (d)We would not make
excuses for breaking the moral law, as we all do.
2. But a universal moral law requires a universal Moral Law Giver, since the
Source of it: (a) Gives moral commands (as lawgivers do). (b)Is interested in
our behavior (as moral persons are).
3. Further, this universal Moral Law Giver must be absolutely good: (a)Otherwise
all moral effort would be futile in the long run, since we could be sacrificing
our lives for what is not ulitmately right. (b)the source of all good must be
absolutely good, since the standard of all good must be completely good.
4. Therefore, there must be an absolutely good Moral Law
Giver.
1. This one I still feel odd about, I'm having trouble believing that people
assert that there is "moral law." (a) There are moral disagreements.
They don't make sense because one of two moral ideas is probably "more
moral" than the other. If there was a "moral law" then it would
be one person saying, "It's immoral to kill because... that's the moral
law!" and another person saying, "It's not immoral to kill because...
that's the moral law!" We can resolve this argument by putting
circumstances on it (e.g. self-defense) and using logic. A moral law would have
to be pre-defined by someone or something (in your case God). If that were the
case then morality could be illogical, but all moral arguments can be solved
logically, e.g. "It isn't immoral to kill for fun!" It is because a
conscious being dies. Many can be solved by "treating others as you would
like to be treated," but this would mean that someone who wants to suffer
would be moral if they made others suffer. This is wrong because it goes against
a logical view of morality as opposed to a Christian one (not that I'm saying
treat others as you would like to be treated isn't okay, but it's flawed). (b)
Yes, logical is pretty good IMHO. (c) Since when was it nescessary to keep
promises or treaties? People break the former all the time, but they face the
consequence of disappointing the other person. As for the latter, if a country
at war will probably break a treaty if they think that they can when by doing so
and if there were no negative side-effects to doing so (excluding religious
side-effects, such as damnation). (d) If morality is based on logic we try to
use logical arguments to say why something we did was moral. If morality is
based on a definite law then there is no excuse for killing someone, unless the
law states there are certain circumstances (and lists the circumstances) in
which said law can be broken.
2. Logic only requires conscious beings, since it is a concept. I attribute
morality to conscious, somewhat logical beings existing. (a) Then, once again,
morality can be flawed as laws can be and they can be unjust and be created with
an agenda. This does not appear to be the case with morality since it isn't
flawed nor self-contradictory in any way. It could be because God wouldn't be
stupid enough to create flawed moral laws, but that requires God to exist. If
there are two equally valid alternatives take the simpler. (b) If it exists then
I suppose it might be interested in our behavior, or if it invented morality and
forced it on us it wants to control us is more likely.
3. (a) Doesn't take into account the idea of morals based on logic. (b) I guess
logic is absolutely good and/or God is. Maybe God decided to make moral laws
compliant with logic, but that presupposes God.
Quote: One thought, since we can
show that the New Testament is in fact accurate and dates back to the first
century, and that these disciples of Christ lived and died for what they claims,
then these guys were either completely crazy, stupid, or they saw the Truth and
were willing to die for it. Noone dies for what they know to be false. Sure,
people have died for something that is false but noone willingly dies for what
they know to be false. These men never
gave up, never weakened, and never quit claiming what they claimed. I believe it
is because they saw, witnessed, heard, felt, touched, and performed everything
they claimed.
People do die for what they know to be false. I can just as easily say that
because people then were so immoral and cruel (at least from what I've learned
about "Biblical times") that these people saw that it was nescessary
to create a religious dogma supporting a higher "level" of
morality.
Now I'm going to sleep. School was really long today... ^^;
Edit: I also noticed that you asserted that God could be omnipresent and use his
omnipotent ability to remove his omnipresence from hell in a thread. Wouldn't
that be contradicting his nature (which you said he couldn't do)?
Quote by Archer79None of the four
proposed replies. I believe in Him because I have seen Him moving in my life,
and in others. ...I worship Him because he is generous, loving, and charitible,
when I am just... ...pathetic. ...I pray to Him because He listens. ...And
replies in ways of incredible intimacy. ...Mericles may not be apparent to all,
but when He moves in grace, His provisions touch you very deep. The four answers
you proposed only scratch the surface of what's really
involved.
Wanted to let you know that I thought this was a great post. RubyDrgOn is so fun
to debate with and I enjoyed your answer.
LOL Just thought I'd put it down. ...Very little compares to experiencing God.
...So... Hopefull all of those with dessenting views will someday find
themselves surprised!
Quote by kellyoFirst, I'm honored to be an
educated fundie. Here's why: since you mock that label it would only make sence
that you'd praise it's opposite - and un-educated non-fundamentalist. In other
words, an un-educated man who stands for nothing.
I would praise its opposite? So you're saying if I made the statement "I
don't like fat chicks" then clearly I like thin men instead? I suppose I
would be praising an educated non-fundie, however your reasoning is flawed. (as
usual)
Quote: If we soften it a little we
can change it to an educated non-fundamentalist. Personally, I think this is
even worse - an educated man who stands for nothing. A man who follows the crowd
and the whim of the culture and all that which is popular. Who's foundation is
weak.
Yay more playing with definitions, you're so predictable. A fundamentalist isn't
just someone who stands for something. Fundamentalist is a word usually reserved
for and meant to imply religious fundamentalists. Suicide bombers are considered
fundamentalists. Pat Robertson is a fundamentalist. These are not people you
want to model yourself after. You're a Christian in Colorado. Sorry but you're
not going against "the crowd". You ARE the crowd. You're the people
hindering education and science in the name of superstition.
Quote: So, honored to be labeled
as "educated" - damn straight. Honored to be labeled as a
"fundie" who stands firm, who doesn't tolerate the wandering winds of
secularism, who makes a claim and sticks to it, who says "as for me and my
house we will serve the Lord" - damn straight.
That's also known as being close-minded. I have no problem with people having
christian beliefs, if I did I'd have to hate everybody. But most normal
Christians can apply at least a bit of reasoning to their faith. They know
Noah's ark is non-sense. They know Jesus isn't coming back. They know evolution
is scientific while creationism is a joke. These things you say, like
"making a claim and sticking to it" are fine until your claim is
proven wrong. After that you're just being stupid and stuborn. You constantly
talk about using reason and logic yet you don't show it AT ALL. Everything you
say smacks of the opposite. You are the opitome of blind faith. You will only
see evidence that reaffirms your world view and never even consider anything
else. You might pretend that "contemplating the last supper" means you
have rational beliefs, but you don't. I could pick anything out of the bible,
pile mounds and mounds of evidence to the contrary right infront of you, and you
would still ignore all the evidence, plug your ears, and repeat "THE BIBLE
IS THE WORD OF GOD" over and over.
And not everything is just about education. Experience, intuition, common sense,
these are the things that will get you through life, that will get you women,
that will get you power, that will get you respect. Education is useful but with
nothing to back it up you're just a little kid getting shoved in a locker. I'm
not assuming you're only educated, or that you're educated at all, but being
well-learned in religious teachings will only get you so far. (This is not an
invitation to tell me your life story, I don't care, just making a point
here.)
Quote: "A man who stands for
nothing is worth nothing." ~ Teddy Roosevelt.
Heh...I somehow doubt he was saying non-fundies are worth nothing, we'd have a
lot of worthless people running around.
Quote: After reading your posts it
is very apparent that you too are educated. It is also very apparent that you
too stand for something and stand strong. Therefore, I believe it's fair to say
that you too are and educated fundie - you just argue from a different side of
the fence.
Nobody stands strong for atheism. It's just one more thing added to the infinite
list of things you don't believe in. I won't fight a war for atheism anymore
than I would fight a war for big foot's lack of existence. If someone showed me
evidence that there was definately a god then I wouldn't stand rigid to atheism,
I'd shift my beliefs. Same as anything else. When science comes up with new
discoveries that disprove your old theories you don't stand firm on the old
disproven theories, you change yourself to fit reality and progress. Nobody
thinks the crazy guy down the street who constantly yells the world is flat is a
"man who stands for something". He's just some lunatic who can't be
taken seriously.
I suppose I stand strong for clear and rational thinking. Perhaps you can coin
the term "Scientific Fundamentalist" just for the sake of your
argument?
I haven't had to time to put my post together that you requested but I did have
a quick question - which then leads to a couple more.
Do you believe you have been presented with enough historical evidence to prove
to you that Jesus lived? - ie. That he was a real person.
If so, do you believe him to be the most incredible liar and deceiver? Think
about how great of a liar he'd have to be to create what he created. So, was he
a liar?
Or, do you believe he was so absolutely psychotic with serious mental issues
that he thought he was divine and was able to convince thousands during his
time?
Or, do you believe He is who He says He is?
Okay, that's fine with me. I know about C.S. Lewis's argument (Liar, Lunatic, or
Lord), but I really don't get it.
To answer your first question, no, I do not think I have been presented with
enough evidence to prove Jesus lived, although I've heard that such evidence
exists and I accept that evidence, which I haven't had time to bother with, as
probably true.
Couldn't Jesus just have been eccentric and wrong about his being the Son of
God? C.S. Lewis leaves too many possibilities that we don't know about (another
example, Jesus could have had a reason for his statements). I can hardly call
that reason to believe in God.
----
Old (leaving it here just so you remember it when you're ready):
Next I wanted to know why you believe God exists, this way I can try to argue
against something that I know is true in your case and your most powerful
reason(s) for your belief.
Quote by kellyoProbably not the best forum
to post this thread because of the many people who will do what they can to show
you believe in a "sky pixie", or a phantasmagore, or that your belief
is weak and unproven. First of all, you have the Truth and you know
that.
So, the answer to your question is easy - study. Learn what it meant for a
jewish boy, or young man, to follow a rabbi. Learn what they had to do to learn
from him. Learn that Jesus called all of us to "Come, follow Me."
Don't get discouraged just study and pray. "Ask...seek...and
knock."
haha that was actually the first time i posted in that forum. thank you
for your encouragement! the only problem in following your advice is my lack of
will power
I just discovered my Guestbook and noticed your post. I appreciate your question
and honestly feel I can answer it.
What it means to me is what Paul meant it to be. You have misinterpretated this
verse. The 'lose you life' part very simply refers to our sinful life. For me, I
grew up in a very "sexual" home. My dad had many affairs and bragged
about his conquests. Can you believe that? Anyway, when I got married I began to
follow suit. After commiting adultery with another woman my life began to change
because I did not want to be like my father. At that point I accepted Christ.
This verse tells me that I have to "lose my life" meaning I have to
let go of that side of me that desires other women. I have to make a choice
everyday to keep my eyes pure, to keep my thoughts in check, to ensure I don't
act out, to pursue that which is good, pure, acceptable, etc. I have to
"lose" that part of me everyday. For those who say Christians are a
bunch of robots are full of crap. We are told to "love the Lord with all
our heart, soul, strength, and mind" and trust me, it takes all of them to
do it. So why do it? You may ask me. Here's my answer: imagine my life if I
simply allowed myself to pursue what I was taught. For one, my wife wouldn't put
up with it again (that took several months of counseling in first place), my
kids would be another product of divorce, my kids would learn why dad left and
potentially do the same thing when they get older, the chance for disease in my
life would greatly increase, the chance for other children outside of marriage
would be more likely, the list goes on. It was the right choice but I have to
choose it every single day and therefore "lose my life."
I believe that answers your second question pertaining to God wanting us to be
slaves. If it that truly were the case then we would be slaves and have no
choice but to believe. We'd be a bunch of robots. Of course, that is not love.
Rape is not love. Forced love is just that, forced. I love my children, but I
can't force them to love me. When they don't like me so much I still love them
and hope that as they get older they will love me
again.
What happens to a person that would rather not have existed for any reason? I
understand what you meant by your words, but some people simply lack the
capacity to comprehend or attain your religious wisdom. What can you say or do
to explain that your God exists and is here for their sake?
merged: 02-13-2006 ~ 02:19am
Quote by kellyo
I don't know exactly what you're asking this for but if, by chance, you think
your existance is questionable, please reconsider.
How does one reconsider the questionable?
Life seems too easy on your end, like you have all the answers and that slightly
bugs me... it creates an aura of envy almost, much like you are of higher
stature due to your knowledge of "faith" in your God. I'm sure you
know this feeling and why it's there, then you will say something along the
lines of "we live life together and have the same issues to deal with on a
daily basis; thus, your hardships are mine, etc..."
Don't consider that I haven't thought about everything you told me in a prior
time of my life, there are just questions that dwell inside that have no outlet
for the answers I seek. It makes sense that you are contempt in not knowing
everything, yet some people, eg ME, cannot simply coast on that premise without
a conclusion.
LOL, I'm not too edumicated either, just looking for truths... I also realize
that to find something, you can't be looking sometimes or you'll miss the point
of what you were looking for in the first place.
Quote by kellyoI believe it's wrong. Just
like other sins - adultery, pediphilia, beastiality, sex outside of marriage,
etc. - God hates it. He doesn't hate the ones who commit the sins but He hates
the sin. And movies like Brokeback are only an attempt to make the perverse
palatible.
What if Hollywood put out a movie that did a masterful job of making us feel the
pain of a female school teacher who had fallen in love with her 15 year old
student? It really made us feel that we shouldn't criticize so much. That they
truly love each other and we should accept them being together.
She's a pediphile. But, I'm sure many would support the movie.
"Groundbreaking!" "Dares us to understand true love!" Can't
you see the reviews?
I saw this response, and I wanted to
comment on it. I agree with you, that homosexuality is a sin, but what I really
wanted to mention was you movie example. I personally think it was a
well-illustrated point; Hollywood does take a lot of stands and glorify them in
order to make them more "acceptable" to society. Anyway, I loved the
way you stated that, an djust wanted to let you know ^^
Quote by kellyokiopi - according to your
logic, which is very flawed, you would also follow this argument: we should
stand by nothing if it can't absolutetly be proven.
Here's an example of how absurd your claim is. My daughter was being pulled in a
wagon by a neighbor girl. The neighbor decided to make a very sharp and quick
U-turn which sent my daughter crashing to the pavement. My daughter stuck out
her arm and "snap" went her bone. We rushed her to the hospital where
we told the story, she received a cast, and we returned to the
neighborhood.
According to you, if the doctor decided to report us for child abuse then we
should have been found guilty and sent to jail. Why? Because, could I ABSOLUTELY
prove to the judge that my story is true? No. But I could provide EVIDENCE and
then let the EVIDENCE tell the story. The neighbor girl could tell her side of
the story, the parents outside could confirm their eyewitness testimony to the
accident. The injury would have matched the story. Other character witnesses
could testify on my behalf. This would then "prove" that the accident
happened as I said it did; however, only in as far as the evidence corresponds
to the reality of the situation.
The judge would have faith in the evidence and make his decision. But, according
to you and your above argument, the judge should say "Evidence or not, you
can't PROVE it therefore I'm going to make my own interpretation and declare you
guilty."
kiopi, your lack of understanding about your own arguments is rather scary
because it defines how you live your life and unfortunately where you spend the
rest of it as well.
merged: 02-03-2006 ~ 03:44am
How about this: have you ever loved anything? A dog, a parent, a sibling, a
girlfriend or boyfriend, a spouse? Honestly, have you ever truly loved
something? PROVE IT
You see, you can't. You can show EVIDENCE of your love but you cannot PROVE IT
in the same way you demand proof of God. Therefore, you must stay consistant,
because if not then you prove yourself wrong, and say that you in fact have
loved NOTHING because you can't prove it.
WOW
Hope your daughter is ok now
I would never try to get you to have a debate with coz I don't think I can
follow your train of thought. Just a joke, stay calm hehehe
When I read your posts, I find them highly comforting. It really makes me
challenge myself to think about all that I know about Christ as I walk along the
path with Him.
Growing up in this world is very difficult as it seems that everywhere I turn,
it shuns what I believe - look at all that stuff on "political
correctness"! (What with "Happy holidays" in place of "Merry
Christmas" and "holiday tree" instead of "Christmas
tree"... it really makes me angry, but I don't feel like there is anything
I can do about it)
So thank you for what you are doing - showing me more about the faith that I
have come to know.
Quote by kellyo"To live is Christ. To
die is gain."
nice 1, but I don't agree with this - "He who seeks to save his life shall
lose it, but he who loses it for His sake and the
Gospel’s, and for the sake of His land,
city and inheritance, he shall save his eternal life"
Paul spoke this, yet it seems so sinister - like you must become a slave to His
will - meaning that is when you'll be saved. What does that aformentioned
apostles statement mean to you? And why is it that slavery seems like the goal
of God?
Just dropping by... I see that you've not been active for 2 weeks now. I'm sorry to see a man of reason quit participating in the forums.
If you're Christian I invite you to join the MT-Christian Fellowship.
It seems that you have worn yourself out arguing with the likes of Plunkies and some other people. My advice is not to speak to them, as they detest all understanding but their own.
"Reprove not a scorner, lest he hate thee: rebuke a wise man, and he will love thee." - Proverbs 9:8
"Speak not in the ears of a fool: for he will despise the wisdom of thy words." - Proverbs 23:9
Yay Kellyo was back! *an hour ago* Hello! ^_^
merged: 06-03-2006 ~ 04:38am
Hi Kellyo! Hope you're doing well! ^_^
Hi, kellyo
I've been browsing the thread "A Challenge to the Atheist" and found your latest post at the last page. I say you have a pretty interesting and wide grasp of the Bible. Thank you. Reading the first ages of the forum drives me crazy. I could have said my word on the matter referencing the Word myself but you've done it better.
Again, thank you.
Hi Kellyo, just wanted to know if you got my messege in your guestbook a week ago. You can take all the time you need, but could you post in my guestbook when you have a chance so I know when you've atleast noted that I replied to your messege. Thanks! ^_^
Now I'm going to bed. =D
Dude! What gives? Are you alive? Are you getting my PMs?
Liar, Lunatic, Lord
There ya go.
EDIT: Uh...You seem to have posted some long rant on my guestbook. As far as I can tell I think it's about this link (I guess?). I didn't actually write the article you know...I just gave you the link. Hell I didn't even comment on it one way or the other. In fact I barely skimmed it, I just thought it might be helpful to one of you. So, if you don't mind please keep your inane ramblings about your dead pal jesus and his invisible friend to yourself, unless I give you a legitimate reason to do otherwise. Thanks!
(Oh and personally, I'd go with self-deluded fanatic if I had to pick, which I guess would fall somewhere between liar and lunatic, but nowhere near lord.)
Then we can safely assume C.S. Lewis made a flawed argument. If you asked me if I thought 2+2= 5, 6, or 7 I would say none and that it was 4. If you said I had to pick one of those three because you don't give me any other possibilities I would be right to say that your question was illogical.
That's wrong. I think a lunatic would be a bit extreme, even calling him eccentric might be a bit much. If a child was brought up its entire life to believe he or she was the Messiah then it is likely that child would believe they were (note that I'm not stating this was Jesus's case. It is hypothetical.). I don't want to take guesses at Jesus's character, but those three are not the only possibilities.
I don't think of you as illogical because I have yet to see exactly why you believe in the Christian Church's god. Atleast you depend on your own ability to reason instead of asking others to justify your beliefs for you. ^_^
I'll look these up and post about them later. I'm really tierd.. =P
1. No, the "greatest good of all persons" is to gain knowledge, if anything.
2. All persons should aim for this "greatest good" if it is logically sound. Having "happiness in harmony" sounds like a waste of time.
3. Yes.
4. Wait, how did God get involved? People can "live in happiness" and "harmony" without a god.
5. Incorrect.
1. This one I still feel odd about, I'm having trouble believing that people assert that there is "moral law." (a) There are moral disagreements. They don't make sense because one of two moral ideas is probably "more moral" than the other. If there was a "moral law" then it would be one person saying, "It's immoral to kill because... that's the moral law!" and another person saying, "It's not immoral to kill because... that's the moral law!" We can resolve this argument by putting circumstances on it (e.g. self-defense) and using logic. A moral law would have to be pre-defined by someone or something (in your case God). If that were the case then morality could be illogical, but all moral arguments can be solved logically, e.g. "It isn't immoral to kill for fun!" It is because a conscious being dies. Many can be solved by "treating others as you would like to be treated," but this would mean that someone who wants to suffer would be moral if they made others suffer. This is wrong because it goes against a logical view of morality as opposed to a Christian one (not that I'm saying treat others as you would like to be treated isn't okay, but it's flawed). (b) Yes, logical is pretty good IMHO. (c) Since when was it nescessary to keep promises or treaties? People break the former all the time, but they face the consequence of disappointing the other person. As for the latter, if a country at war will probably break a treaty if they think that they can when by doing so and if there were no negative side-effects to doing so (excluding religious side-effects, such as damnation). (d) If morality is based on logic we try to use logical arguments to say why something we did was moral. If morality is based on a definite law then there is no excuse for killing someone, unless the law states there are certain circumstances (and lists the circumstances) in which said law can be broken.
2. Logic only requires conscious beings, since it is a concept. I attribute morality to conscious, somewhat logical beings existing. (a) Then, once again, morality can be flawed as laws can be and they can be unjust and be created with an agenda. This does not appear to be the case with morality since it isn't flawed nor self-contradictory in any way. It could be because God wouldn't be stupid enough to create flawed moral laws, but that requires God to exist. If there are two equally valid alternatives take the simpler. (b) If it exists then I suppose it might be interested in our behavior, or if it invented morality and forced it on us it wants to control us is more likely.
3. (a) Doesn't take into account the idea of morals based on logic. (b) I guess logic is absolutely good and/or God is. Maybe God decided to make moral laws compliant with logic, but that presupposes God.
People do die for what they know to be false. I can just as easily say that because people then were so immoral and cruel (at least from what I've learned about "Biblical times") that these people saw that it was nescessary to create a religious dogma supporting a higher "level" of morality.
Now I'm going to sleep. School was really long today... ^^;
Edit: I also noticed that you asserted that God could be omnipresent and use his omnipotent ability to remove his omnipresence from hell in a thread. Wouldn't that be contradicting his nature (which you said he couldn't do)?
Here
If only you put half of the effort you put in religion on science, discussing anything with you might not be so tedious.
"It is impossible to defeat an ignorant man in argument"
LOL Just thought I'd put it down. ...Very little compares to experiencing God. ...So... Hopefull all of those with dessenting views will someday find themselves surprised!
I would praise its opposite? So you're saying if I made the statement "I don't like fat chicks" then clearly I like thin men instead? I suppose I would be praising an educated non-fundie, however your reasoning is flawed. (as usual)
Yay more playing with definitions, you're so predictable. A fundamentalist isn't just someone who stands for something. Fundamentalist is a word usually reserved for and meant to imply religious fundamentalists. Suicide bombers are considered fundamentalists. Pat Robertson is a fundamentalist. These are not people you want to model yourself after. You're a Christian in Colorado. Sorry but you're not going against "the crowd". You ARE the crowd. You're the people hindering education and science in the name of superstition.
That's also known as being close-minded. I have no problem with people having christian beliefs, if I did I'd have to hate everybody. But most normal Christians can apply at least a bit of reasoning to their faith. They know Noah's ark is non-sense. They know Jesus isn't coming back. They know evolution is scientific while creationism is a joke. These things you say, like "making a claim and sticking to it" are fine until your claim is proven wrong. After that you're just being stupid and stuborn. You constantly talk about using reason and logic yet you don't show it AT ALL. Everything you say smacks of the opposite. You are the opitome of blind faith. You will only see evidence that reaffirms your world view and never even consider anything else. You might pretend that "contemplating the last supper" means you have rational beliefs, but you don't. I could pick anything out of the bible, pile mounds and mounds of evidence to the contrary right infront of you, and you would still ignore all the evidence, plug your ears, and repeat "THE BIBLE IS THE WORD OF GOD" over and over.
And not everything is just about education. Experience, intuition, common sense, these are the things that will get you through life, that will get you women, that will get you power, that will get you respect. Education is useful but with nothing to back it up you're just a little kid getting shoved in a locker. I'm not assuming you're only educated, or that you're educated at all, but being well-learned in religious teachings will only get you so far. (This is not an invitation to tell me your life story, I don't care, just making a point here.)
Heh...I somehow doubt he was saying non-fundies are worth nothing, we'd have a lot of worthless people running around.
Nobody stands strong for atheism. It's just one more thing added to the infinite list of things you don't believe in. I won't fight a war for atheism anymore than I would fight a war for big foot's lack of existence. If someone showed me evidence that there was definately a god then I wouldn't stand rigid to atheism, I'd shift my beliefs. Same as anything else. When science comes up with new discoveries that disprove your old theories you don't stand firm on the old disproven theories, you change yourself to fit reality and progress. Nobody thinks the crazy guy down the street who constantly yells the world is flat is a "man who stands for something". He's just some lunatic who can't be taken seriously.
I suppose I stand strong for clear and rational thinking. Perhaps you can coin the term "Scientific Fundamentalist" just for the sake of your argument?
Okay, that's fine with me. I know about C.S. Lewis's argument (Liar, Lunatic, or Lord), but I really don't get it.
To answer your first question, no, I do not think I have been presented with enough evidence to prove Jesus lived, although I've heard that such evidence exists and I accept that evidence, which I haven't had time to bother with, as probably true.
Couldn't Jesus just have been eccentric and wrong about his being the Son of God? C.S. Lewis leaves too many possibilities that we don't know about (another example, Jesus could have had a reason for his statements). I can hardly call that reason to believe in God.
----
Old (leaving it here just so you remember it when you're ready):
Next I wanted to know why you believe God exists, this way I can try to argue against something that I know is true in your case and your most powerful reason(s) for your belief.
haha
What happens to a person that would rather not have existed for any reason? I understand what you meant by your words, but some people simply lack the capacity to comprehend or attain your religious wisdom. What can you say or do to explain that your God exists and is here for their sake?
merged: 02-13-2006 ~ 02:19am
How does one reconsider the questionable?
Life seems too easy on your end, like you have all the answers and that slightly bugs me... it creates an aura of envy almost, much like you are of higher stature due to your knowledge of "faith" in your God. I'm sure you know this feeling and why it's there, then you will say something along the lines of "we live life together and have the same issues to deal with on a daily basis; thus, your hardships are mine, etc..."
Don't consider that I haven't thought about everything you told me in a prior time of my life, there are just questions that dwell inside that have no outlet for the answers I seek. It makes sense that you are contempt in not knowing everything, yet some people, eg ME, cannot simply coast on that premise without a conclusion.
LOL, I'm not too edumicated either, just looking for truths... I also realize that to find something, you can't be looking sometimes or you'll miss the point of what you were looking for in the first place.
I saw this response, and I wanted to comment on it. I agree with you, that homosexuality is a sin, but what I really wanted to mention was you movie example. I personally think it was a well-illustrated point; Hollywood does take a lot of stands and glorify them in order to make them more "acceptable" to society. Anyway, I loved the way you stated that, an djust wanted to let you know ^^
WOW
Hope your daughter is ok now
I would never try to get you to have a debate with coz I don't think I can follow your train of thought. Just a joke, stay calm hehehe
When I read your posts, I find them highly comforting. It really makes me challenge myself to think about all that I know about Christ as I walk along the path with Him.
Growing up in this world is very difficult as it seems that everywhere I turn, it shuns what I believe - look at all that stuff on "political correctness"! (What with "Happy holidays" in place of "Merry Christmas" and "holiday tree" instead of "Christmas tree"... it really makes me angry, but I don't feel like there is anything I can do about it)
So thank you for what you are doing - showing me more about the faith that I have come to know.
In Him
nice 1, but I don't agree with this - "He who seeks to save his life shall lose it, but he who loses it for His sake and the Gospel’s, and for the sake of His land, city and inheritance, he shall save his eternal life"
Paul spoke this, yet it seems so sinister - like you must become a slave to His will - meaning that is when you'll be saved. What does that aformentioned apostles statement mean to you? And why is it that slavery seems like the goal of God?